HIV-negative
heterosexuals who take drugs that protect them from contracting the
AIDS virus from their HIV-positive partners don't engage in more risky
sexual behaviors, according to a new study.
Researchers from the University of Washington in
Seattle found that knowing they are protected against HIV transmission
doesn't change how these people behave sexually or lead them to have sex
without a condom more often.
The study is published in the Oct. 16 issue of the journal The Lancet Infectious Diseases.
"Evidence for the effectiveness of new
HIV-prevention strategies, including pre-exposure prophylaxis, has
spurred optimism that the global HIV epidemic might be reversed," Dr.
Jared Baeten said in a journal news release. "However, an important
question is whether HIV-negative partners who know they're protected by
prophylaxis will compensate for this by increasing their sexual
risk-taking, such as through increasing their levels of unprotected
sex."
In conducting the study, an international team of
researchers led by Baeten examined findings from the 2011 Partners PrEP
study, which revealed that a preventive drug regimen could protect
HIV-negative men and women from contracting the virus from their
HIV-positive partner.
The researchers examined information on more than
3,000 people for up to one year before and after taking drugs to prevent
the transmission of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. The participants
were counseled on pregnancy testing and how to reduce their risk for sexually transmitted infections, such as gonorrhea, chlamydia, and trichomoniasis.
Even before the participants learned the results of
the research, which established the protective effects of the drugs,
they were engaging in unprotected sex less often, the study authors
found. The researchers concluded that the risk counseling the
participants had received may have been effective.
After the participants knew the drugs they were
taking were shown to provide protection against HIV transmission, the
investigators found no significant difference in the level of
unprotected sex taking place between partners.
There was, however, a slight increase in the
frequency of unprotected sex outside the relationship. The researchers
said there was no increase in rates of sexually transmitted infections
or pregnancy.
"The results provide encouraging evidence that
behavioral changes as a result of pre-exposure prophylaxis might not
undermine its strong HIV prevention and public-health benefits," Baeten said.
Source: Health Day News
No comments:
Post a Comment